Appalling ISIS video shows ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud being razed to ground

A video allegedly showing Islamic State militants using bulldozers and explosives to destroy the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud has been posted online. The UNESCO cultural site near Mosul is one of Iraqi’s greatest archaeological treasures.

The seven-minute video shows the jihadists vandalizing the
ancient reliefs in Nimrud, an area that is held by militants.
They also used sledgehammers and drills to bring down some of the
walls and ultimately levelled the whole complex with explosives.

The video follows a statement made by Iraq's Ministry of Tourism
and Antiquities in March. It said Nimrud, a UNESCO cultural
heritage site with archaeological riches dating back to the 13th
century BC, was bulldozed with heavy machinery. RT could not
verify the footage.

On Sunday, an Iraqi Antiquities Ministry official, speaking on
the condition of anonymity, told AP that all items at the
cultural site were authentic.

The jihadists have previously said they consider the artifacts to
be idolatry. The militants, who have created a self-proclaimed
caliphate in northern Iraq and parts of Syria, have been waging a
campaign to obliterate cultural sites and relics, which do not
fall in line with their ideology.

Another video released in April, shows the Islamic State (IS)
destroying the 2,000-year-old ruins in the ancient Hatra city in
northern Iraq, 110 kilometres south of Mosul.

The jihadists obliterated ancient artifacts in the Mosul Museum
in February, while they also blew up the Mosul Public Library,
using homemade bombs. The Central Library of Mosul was not spared
either. IS militants burned all the books and left only Islamic
publications.

In March, the UN cultural agency's chief, Irina Bokova, slammed
the destruction of Nimrud, saying that it amounted to a war
crime.

Last month UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called on the
international community to “swiftly put a stop to such
heinous terrorist activity and to counter the illicit traffic in
cultural artifacts, as demanded by Security Council
resolutions.”

The city of Nimrud located on the Tigris River was founded in the
13th century BC. It was part of the Assyrian empire, which
occupied territory from the Mediterranean to the Caspian Sea. Its
treasures were discovered by archaeologists in the 20th century
and are considered to be one of the most notable finds during
that period.

Though, most of the priceless artifacts have been moved to
museums in Mosul, Baghdad, Paris and London, the giant statues of
lamassu – an Assyrian deity depicted with a bull or lion's body,
eagle's wings and human heads – remained on site.

Several campaigns have been launched in protest the horrific
destruction of Iraq’s cultural heritage. One was initiated by the
Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow. In March the museum
launched the hashtag #savetheshedu, which invited people to
take a photograph of the shedu on display in the museum.

In Sumerian and Akkadian mythology, a shedu is protective spirit.
It was depicted as a creature with five-legs, the body of a bull,
wings of an eagle and head of a human. It was placed at the
entrances of palaces and at the gates of ancient Mesopotamian
cities.

"This is a huge loss not just for them but for all of
humanity. If we cannot respect our common history, then we have
no hope," Anastasia Yainovskaya from the Department of the
Ancient East at the Pushkin Museum told the Moscow Times.